Archive for May 14th, 2008

Credit Card Debt - The Debt Problem No One Wants to Talk About

How many people when they got their first credit card jumped up and down for joy? Come on now, I see you all raising your hands!

The following story may sound all to familiar to some:

You have a good decent paying job, finally. Now it is time to trade in that old clunker of a car that barely gets you to work and back. You go to the car dealership and find the car of your dreams! You talk to the salesman and he works the numbers. He can give you $1000.00 for your old clunker car. He will use the $1000.00 cash back as your down payment. He checks your credit (You have no credit history that you know of.), he comes back and tries to get you to pay more of a down payment. You tell him you can just go down the street to another dealer. He says no, he will go talk to someone. Well you are now driving away with your new car! You can hardly believe it. You can afford the $300.00 per month no sweat!

I know I know I am getting to the point soon!

A few months go by and everything is going great. The job is going good, and you love your new car.

Then you come home from work one day and check the mail. There is an envelope from a credit card company. You open it up and they are inviting you to apply for their credit card. You think “no way can I get this”. But you fill it out anyway and send it in. 6 weeks you check the mail and here it is! You have a shiny new credit card with a $500.00 limit! You can hardly contain yourself! You think WOW! They sent me this credit card, and now my will be even life will be better! It is just like having free money! Who’s the big shot now?

(Finally you have something on your credit report, and the credit card companies see it.)

You think of the things you need. Clothes and that weekend trip to the beach. You buy your clothes and take your trip. Within the first month you are at your $500.00 limit. But it is ok, you can make the payment.

A few months go by and you check the mail. There is an R.S.V.P for a credit card. And you are pre-approved! Life is good! You eagerly mail it back. 2 weeks later it arrives. Your limit is $1000.00! 2 months later you get another R.S.V.P for a credit card. Can you believe this? you say to yourself.

You once again fill out the form and send it in. This time you have a $2000.00 limit. The R.S.V.P’s kept coming, and you kept biting. You now have between 5 and 8 credit cards with varying limits.

(There is a lot on your credit report now, so the credit card companies jump on it!)

3 years have gone by and you have been able to keep up with the credit card payments, even tho all the cards have been maxed out for 2 years. You had to use the cash on the cards sometimes to make payments on the other cards. Those darn interest rates are so high! You think as your payments barely make a dent in the balances!

Then the news: You have been LAID OFF your job! Panic sets in. How am I going to pay my bills, let alone those credit card bills? Your unemployment will cover the basics and your car payment until you can find another job. And you need the car to look for work.

8 months have gone by. You have barely made this far. You found a job that pays about half of your last one. But you have not made any credit card payments in months. Your phone is ringing off the hook. You are grateful to have an answering machine. You are so stressed out now. When the phone rings you feel ill. You are considering Bankruptcy. Yes the Bankruptcy word. !!BANKRUPTCY!! Ugh! But you haven’t been able to save the money to do the Bankruptcy. You worry that people will find out how much debt you have, it is embarrassing!

It has now been 3 years since you lost that good job you had. But you have finally found one that is close to what you where making before. And I didn’t have to sign a paper so they could check my credit to get hired (the majority of companies do this now, bad credit no hire!). You do not need to do the Bankruptcy now. But it has been so long since you paid on your credit cards. The statute of limitations has not run out on them yet. But you do not want to reset the clock. You have heard of do it yourself debt settlement and decide to check it out. Debt settlement is used for unsecured debt. My credit cards are all unsecured debt. 1 credit card debt can be settled at a time. You do the negotiating yourself and save $1000’s in fee’s. This looks like the best and most cost effective route I can take. I can finally get some sleep! Debt settlement as a terrific alternative to bankruptcy!

What are the points of the story?

- Credit Cards are NOT free money!

- DO NOT send back those R.S.V.P pre-approved credit card applications! Shred them!

- Check to see who is checking your credit report.

- Debt settlement and negotiation is here to stay! And it works!

- This was the true story of a family member!

Lynette Edgecomb is an expert on search engine optimization. She recommends debt settlement and negotiation as an alternative to bankruptcy.

Published in: Credit Matters | on May 14th, 2008 | Comments Off

Parker & Waichman, LLP Evaluating Trasylol Claims after Study Links Medication to Kidney Failure, St

NEW YORK, January 31, 2006 — Parker & Waichman, LLP
(www.yourlawyer.com) announces that in addition to numerous
inquiries from potential clients it has been retained in a case
involving the use of Trasylol and is actively evaluating claims
concerning Trasylol, a drug commonly used during heart surgery
to reduce blood loss. Trasylol, known generically as Aprotinin,
is manufactured by Bayer AG (NYSE:BAY) and is estimated to have
generated $600 million in sales in 2005.

A study reported last week in the New England Journal of
Medicine shows that Trasylol is linked to serious side effects.
The study of 4,374 patients demonstrated that Trasylol at least
doubles the risk of kidney failure and stroke, or
encephalopathy, and raises the risk of heart failure or heart
attack by 55 percent. Parker & Waichman, LLP represents victims
of Trasylol and is actively evaluating claims on their behalf.
For more information about Trasylol and the study published in
the New England Journal of Medicine please visit
http://www.yourlawyer.com/topics/overview/trasylol or
http://www.trasylol-lawsuit.com.

Trasylol was initially approved by the FDA in 1993 and is
indicated to reduce perioperative blood loss and the need for
blood transfusion in patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass
(CPB) in the course of coronary artery bypass graft surgery
(CABG). While Trasylol is only approved for specific heart
surgeries, it is commonly used for other surgeries including
orthopedic procedures. Prior to the publication of the study
reported in the New England Journal of Medicine, Bayer AG filed
a request with the FDA seeking Trasylol approval for hip and
spinal surgeries.

Trasylol, which is derived from the lungs of bovine, is
significantly more dangerous than similar drugs used to reduce
blood loss. The two generic drugs examined in the New England
Journal of Medicine study, aminocaproic acid and tranexamic
acid, were found to be significantly safer and just as effective
as Trasylol. Furthermore, these generics are significantly less
expensive than Trasylol; Trasylol costs more than $1,000 per
patient versus $10 to $50 per patient for the generic drugs. The
researchers estimated that using one of these generic drugs
instead of Trasylol could prevent as many as 11,050 dialysis
complications worldwide, and reduce drug costs by $250 million
per year.

“This has all the signs of a drug that should not be on the
market. It’s more dangerous than the alternatives, which are
just as effective. It’s also more costly to patients and the
healthcare system as a whole. There is no reason for this drug
to be on the market today” said Jason Mark, an attorney with
Parker & Waichman, LLP

Most surgical patients are unaware of the medications they are
given during the course of a surgical procedure. Trasylol is
used during surgery, and it is therefore unlikely that patients
would be aware that this drug was administered. For this reason,
Parker & Waichman, LLP is encouraging all patients who suffered
kidney failure, heart attack, heart failure or stroke after any
surgical procedure to request a free case evaluation at
http://www.yourlawyer.com/topics/overview/trasylol

Published in: World Of Law | on May 14th, 2008 | Comments Off